Preventing cancer for future generations of Black families

Sep 9 8:43am | Kanaaz Pereira, Connect Moderator | @kanaazpereira

a Black woman in a patient gown being prepared by a medical assistant for a breast cancer screening or mammogram

Black people are more likely to die from cancer than other racial and ethnic groups. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, African Americans have the highest death rate from cancer overall.

Dr. Kim Barbel Johnson, a Mayo Clinic family medicine physician with the Mayo Clinic Comprehensive Cancer Center, says educating patients is essential to reducing and preventing cancer deaths among Black people.

Black people are more likely to die from prostate, lung and breast cancer than other races. Dr. Barbel Johnson says there are many contributing factors, including genetics, habits and other mitigating circumstances.

"It has a lot to do with the structural racism that has created the environment, not only for access but for prioritizing and evolving treatments," says Dr. Barbel Johnson.

The family medicine physician says regular cancer screenings are key to increasing survival rates.

"It's important that we prioritize those things where we're seeing the incidence and the death rates are highest in these populations to be screened for those conditions," says Dr. Barbel Johnson.

Originally published on Mayo Clinic News Network

 

Interested in more newsfeed posts like this? Go to the Community Outreach and Engagement in Research blog.

Please sign in or register to post a reply.